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Differences in online study behaviour between sub-populations of MOOC learners
Author(s) -
Amy Woodgate,
Hamish Macleod,
Anne-Marie Scott,
Jeff Haywood
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
educación xx1
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2174-5374
pISSN - 1139-613X
DOI - 10.5944/educxx1.13461
Subject(s) - massive open online course , mathematics education , computer science , dependency (uml) , psychology , online learning , world wide web , artificial intelligence
Information was gathered about learners who were studying on repeat offerings in 2013-14 of six University of Edinburgh MOOCs on the Coursera platform. Two sources of information were used in this study: learner-contributed information about themselves and their study intentions collected in voluntary surveys, and data about learner behaviours, including performance on the courses, collected from the platform software during the MOOC deliveries. Three aspects of learner attributes and behaviours were analysed to investigate: whether learners who took the same MOOC twice performed better the second time; whether learners managed to achieve the goals that they said they had before the course began, in particular, achievement of a Statement of Accomplishment (SoA), and whether learners who did persist in the MOOCs and gained SoAs exhibited different behaviours with respect to their use of the online features of the MOOC platform. Of the small number of MOOC repeating learners, most were drawn from those who had been active in their first round of study, and of those who were not active in their first round, they mainly failed to be active in their second, suggesting structural reasons for their lack of activity. A small number of MOOC repeat learners gained a second SoA. 6

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